DLTK's Crafts for KidsAutumn Wreath Craft

Contributed by Leanne Guenther

The diameter of the completed wreath is about 15 inches.

This craft is fun for older children (and adults!) - Age 6+. There are quite a few steps that younger kids (Age 2+) can help with, but they won't be
able to do the craft independently. This is a good family project!

This fun Autumn wreath is made with, you guessed it, TP ROLLS!! Everyone in my family has been collecting them for me and we ended up with a whole
bunch of extra ones. I was stumped for a way to use them!

We're hosting thanksgiving at our house this year and I wanted to make a big wreath to hang up. I went to the craft store to find a wreath base and
was shocked by how much they cost.

if you want this to be a real "kids project", have them do leaf rubbings and cut those out to paste on the wreath.

To do a leaf rubbing,

collect leaves from outside and place them bumpy side up on a table.

Put a piece of white paper over top.

With the side of an unwrapped crayon, rub over the leaf to make your rubbing.

Then cut out.

You can have a whole class/daycare make one wreath for the wall using this leaf rubbing technique.

tape,

glue,

scissors

Craft Instructions:

ADULT: Take each tp roll and cut a slit HALFWAY through.

Optional: Paint tp rolls a neutral color. You can see from the finished craft that not much shows through, but my kids have fun painting,
so we painted them all brown.

Let dry.

ADULT: Bend the
coat hanger to form a circle.

Using the slits cut halfway through the rolls, slide each of your tp rolls onto the hanger to form a big circle of tp rolls.

Optional: Take a bit of masking or scotch tape and tape the tp rolls together. (tape the openings of the tp rolls on the inside of the
circle together). This will keep the rolls from spinning around while you're working. If you chose not to do this, the paper leaves will
keep everything from spinning on the finished craft.

Cut out many, many leaf shapes. We folded
the construction paper in half and in half again and traced our shapes onto the top. Then we cut out the shape from the folded paper and got 4 at
a time.

I've provided a template with a few different shapes you can chose to trace. We used the maple and poplar leaves, but use the ones that remind
you of home!

One person can be doing this part while another is assembling the tp roll wreath base.

We made sets of leaves by
putting a maple leaf on top and gluing 1 yellow + 1 orange leaf to the top at an angle and 1 yellow + 1 orange leaf to the bottom at an angle.

We glued these onto the tp rolls.

This made more of a pattern on our wreath.

Younger children could just randomly glue the leaves where-ever they wanted.

Tie a bow on the top if you want to.

If you're like me, right now you're envisioning all the different types of wreathes you could make this way... Halloween with jack'o'lanterns, ghosts and
bats, Christmas with holly leaves and berries, Valentine's Day with hearts, St Patrick's Day with shamrocks, rainbows and pots of gold, etc, etc.
I'm sure you'll see templates/instructions for various wreaths made along these basic lines pop up on the site over the next year or two!

Craft Templates:

Close the template window after printing to return to this screen.

Set page margins to zero if you have trouble fitting the template on one page (FILE, PAGE SETUP or FILE, PRINTER SETUP in most browsers).